"I would, exceptthat those two little doors were making me nervous. They looked like they were just the right size for a young Frankenstein or Wolfman to come busting out of once all the grown folks left the room, and since there was only one chair in the room I wouldn't be able to block both of the doors off."This is a simile because they used "like" in this sentence. They are comparing the door to a door with Frankenstien or Wolfman in it. It is a good comparison because he thinks that there might be a monster in there.
"I can never get why grown folks will put a kid all alone in a bedroom all night. It's just like they give the ghosts a treasure map and instead of there being a big pot of gold where X marks the spot, there's some poor kid that's sound asleep." This is a simile because they use "like" in this sentence.This sentence is comparing a kid all alone sleeping to ghosts finding him. It's a good comparison because he's scared of what might happen next.
"I can never get why grown folks will put a kid all alone in a bedroom all night. It's just like they give the ghosts a treasure map and instead of there being a big pot of gold where X marks the spot, there's some poor kid that's sound asleep." This is a simile because they use "like" in this sentence.This sentence is comparing a kid all alone sleeping to ghosts finding him. It's a good comparison because he's scared of what might happen next.
-Matthew